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Does the territorial state organisation matter for effective policy
making, and if so, in what way? So far, we know relatively little
about its effects on policy making and policy outputs. Starting
from the hypothesis that decentralised policy making has positive
effects whereas federalism has a slightly negative impact on policy
performance, this book systematically tests the independent and
interdependent effects of different combinations of federal/unitary
and decentralised/centralised structures of decision making and
implementation. Based on a mixed methods design it first
quantitatively tests the relationships for the OECD countries in
cross-sectional as well as panel designs. In a second step,
qualitative case studies are conducted for four countries:
federal-centralised Austria, federal-decentralised Switzerland,
unitary-decentralised Denmark, and unitary-centralised Ireland. The
authors study two space-related policy areas, both with regard to
the decision making and the implementation stage of the
policy-making process: regional policy and transport policy.
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